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Citizens' Movement (Mexico)

Mexican political party

Citizens' Movement (Mexico)

Summary

Mexican political party

FieldValue
nameCitizens' Movement
logoMC Party (Mexico).svg
logo_size150
colorcode
leaderJorge Álvarez Máynez
leader1_titleSenate Leader
leader1_nameClemente Castañeda Hoeflich
leader2_titleChamber Leader
leader2_nameIvonne Ortega Pacheco
founderDante Delgado Rannauro
foundation1 August 1999 (as CpD)
16 August 2002 (as CON)
31 July 2011 (as MC)
ideologySocial democracy
Progressivism
Participatory democracy
Social liberalism
headquartersLouisiana 113 Nápoles, Benito Juárez, 03810 Mexico City
website
countryMexico
native_nameMovimiento Ciudadano
coloursOrange and White
splitInstitutional Revolutionary Party
newspaperEl Ciudadano
youth_wingYouth in Movement
membership_year2023
membership384,005
position
nationalAlliance for Mexico (1999–2001)
Coalition for the Good of All (2005–2006)
Progressive Movement (2011–2012)
Por México al Frente (2017–2018)
internationalProgressive Alliance
affiliation1_titleContinental affiliation
affiliation1COPPPAL
seats1_title
seats1
seats2_titleSenate
seats2
seats3_titleGovernorships
seats3
seats4_titleState legislatures
seats4

16 August 2002 (as CON) 31 July 2011 (as MC) Progressivism Participatory democracy Social liberalism Coalition for the Good of All (2005–2006) Progressive Movement (2011–2012) Por México al Frente (2017–2018)

Citizens' Movement (, MC) is a centre-left political party in Mexico. It was founded in 1999 under the name Convergence for Democracy, which was then shortened to Convergence in 2002 and changed to Citizens' Movement in 2011.

Established on 1 August 1999, Convergence for Democracy was founded by civil society activists and former Institutional Revolutionary Party members, advocating for a social market economy and democratic reforms to increase citizen participation in governance. Once the drug war started, the party included demilitarization efforts and drug regulation in its platform. Initially aligning with left-wing coalitions since its inception, disagreements with left-wing parties prompted the party's shift to independence in elections from 2012 onwards. However, it briefly joined an alliance during the 2018 election. Since then, it has heavily focused on sustainability and social issues in its party platform.

It is the third political force in the country, receiving 10.32% of the votes cast in the 2024 presidential election, and has yet to secure victory in a presidential race. As of 2023, it has 384,005 members, and its members are known as emecistas.

History

Convergence for Democracy (1997–2002)

Convergence for Democracy originally gained national political grouping status in 1997, before attaining its party status in 1999. Founded on the principles of a social market economy, the party asserted it as the most effective framework for economic organization. Additionally, it advocated for additional democratic reforms in Mexico, aiming to give the public greater control over the country, and to further enhance the country's democratization process that started in 1982.

For the 2000 presidential election, Convergence for Democracy joined other left-wing parties in the Alliance for Mexico (Alianza por México). They nominated Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas as the presidential candidate and endorsed various candidates for state positions, namely Andrés Manuel López Obrador for the Head of the Federal District. Despite Cárdenas' third-place finish, López Obrador emerged victorious in his election.

In the local elections of 2001 and 2002, the party made gains in different states, securing victories for the positions of municipal presidents in the capitals of Veracruz and Oaxaca.

In August 2002, during the party's second National Assembly, members collectively opted to streamline the party's name to Convergence.

Convergence (2002–2011)

mid-term congressional election]] as an independent party, and garnered 2.3% of the popular vote and five seats in the Chamber of Deputies. By 2006, the party had one coalition governor, one senator, 5 federal deputies, 25 state deputies, and 29 municipal presidents.

In the 2006 general election, Convergence established another left-wing electoral alliance, the Coalition for the Good of All, with the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) and the Labor Party (PT). The alliance rallied behind Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who faced a narrow defeat to Felipe Calderón, with a slim margin of approximately 0.56% in the national vote, prompting the alliance to assert allegations of electoral fraud. Following the Federal Electoral Tribunal's rejection of requests for a recount, the alliance's constituent parties coalesced to form a legislative coalition known as the Broad Progressive Front.

The tenure of Felipe Calderón significantly reshaped the political landscape, marked by the initiation of the Mexican drug war and the 2008 financial crisis in Mexico. By the 2009 legislative elections, Convergence and the Labor Party forged an electoral alliance known as Salvemos a México and formed a party platform opposing policies implemented during Calderón's administration. Convergence adopted a more assertive stance toward the implementation of a social market economy, as the party claimed that the financial crisis was caused by a lack of regulatory oversight by the state. The party also called for an end to the drug war, deeming it a failed endeavor that tarnished the military's public image and contributed to the erosion of human rights in the country. The alliance proposed the demilitarization of the country and called for democratic reforms in order to establish a true democratic state, free from discrimination, as a means to reduce crime. Furthermore, Convergence called for the creation of a fourth branch of government, managed by citizens, with the authority to audit and sanction members of the other three branches in cases of non-compliance with their obligations.

In 2010, one of the party's own candidates, Gabino Cué Monteagudo, won the governorship of Oaxaca through a coalition with other parties.

In 2011, during the party's second Special National Assembly, members voted to reform the party's structure, including its name and logo, rebranding the party to Citizens' Movement.

Citizens' Movement (2011–present)

In 2012, Citizens' Movement became part of the left-wing Progressive Movement electoral alliance, nominating Andrés Manual López Obrador for a second presidential candidacy. The party continued its aggressive stance on the state of Mexico's economic system, attributing the widespread poverty to the neoliberal policies implemented in Mexico since the mid-1980s, which López Obrador campaigned on changing. However, López Obrador lost to Enrique Peña Nieto by a margin of over 5%.

Following the election, López Obrador parted ways with the PRD and Citizens' Movement and chose to establish his own political party, Morena. In late 2012, the PRD entered into the Pact for Mexico agreement with the Institutional Revolutionary Party and National Action Party. Considering this a betrayal, Dante Delgado Rannauro, the party leader of Citizens' Movement, severed ties with the PRD. The party also clarified that it would not enter into an alliance with Morena due to ideology disagreements, which led the party to participate in elections independently from 2013 to 2017.

In the leadup to the 2018 general election, Dante Delgado expressed willingness to participate in an electoral alliance. Despite the Labor Party, their long-time ally, forming an alliance with López Obrador's Morena, Citizens' Movement maintained its stance of refraining from aligning with Morena. Instead, Citizens' Movement forged a big-tent electoral alliance with the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) and the National Action Party (PAN). Delgado and Raúl Flores, the head of the PRD, stated that the alliance's goal was to prove that the country's interests went before party politics, with Delgado stating that the alliance legally bound the parties to serve the citizens they represented. As part of its digital electoral strategy, Citizens' Movement utilized the viral music video "Movimiento Naranja – Yuawi," amassing over 54 million views on YouTube by the time of the election. The alliance's nominee, Ricardo Anaya, lost to Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who secured a landslide victory. However, in Jalisco, the party achieved its first solo governorship victory, electing Enrique Alfaro Ramírez. Since the 2018 elections, the party has remained independent in elections, abstaining from forming any alliances and even nominating their own presidential candidate, Jorge Máynez, in the 2024 presidential election. The party's agenda also underwent a shift in priorities. The party placed a heavy focus on the environment, sustainable mobility, and a green economy, proposing constitutional amendments that would assign the government the responsibility of mitigating climate change. Additionally, the party platform focused more on social issues, particularly the eradication of violence, exclusion, and discrimination against women. The party has also continued its opposition to the drug war, claiming that continued militarization efforts had not decreased violence, instead advocating for reforming 2006 drug policies and the implementation of regulations on drug usage as measures to mitigate violence.

Ideology

The party describes itself as a center-left social democratic, with the party positioning itself to the right of Morena.

The current party platform aims to advocate for a social market economy, gender equality, sexual freedom, sustainable mobility, the use of sustainable energy, a green economy, a new fiscal pact, demilitarization, federalism and primary elections in political parties.

Party leaders

OfficeholderTermStartEnd
Luis Walton Aburto1 August 20118 September 2012
Dante Delgado Rannauro8 September 20122 December 2018
Clemente Castañeda Hoeflich2 December 20185 December 2021
Dante Delgado Rannauro5 December 20215 December 2024
Jorge Máynez5 December 2024Incumbent

Election results

Presidential elections

Election yearCandidateVotes%ResultNote20002006201220182024
Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas6,256,78016.64DefeatedSupport PRD candidate; alliance: Alliance for Mexico
Andrés Manuel López Obrador14,756,35035.31DefeatedSupport PRD candidate; alliance: Coalition for the Good of All
Andrés Manuel López Obrador15,848,82731.61DefeatedSupport PRD candidate; alliance: Progressive Movement
Ricardo Anaya12,610,12022.27DefeatedSupport PAN candidate; alliance: Por México al Frente
Jorge Máynez6,204,71010.32Defeated

Congressional elections

Chamber of Deputies

Election yearSeats The seat distribution does not take into account party switches during the legislative term.Electoral alliancePresidencyPositionConstituencyParty-listTotalSeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%200020032006200920122015201820212024
02Alliance for MexicoVicente Fox[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg23px]]Minority
0605,1562.345602,3922.34NoneVicente Fox[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
512Coalition for the Good of AllFelipe Calderón[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
0822,0012.516854,3472.60Salvemos a MéxicoFelipe Calderón[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
72,013,1804.2592,024,5284.26Progressive MovementEnrique Peña Nieto[[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
102,412,8176.40152,431,0636.40NoneEnrique Peña Nieto[[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
172,473,0564.60102,484,1854.60Por México al FrenteAndrés Manuel López Obrador[[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
73,425,0067.26163,449,8047.27NoneAndrés Manuel López Obrador[[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
16,446,53711.34266,497,40411.34NoneClaudia Sheinbaum[[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition

Senate elections

Election yearSeatsElectoral alliancePresidencyPositionConstituencyParty-listTotalSeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%20002006201220182024
01Alliance for MexicoVicente Fox[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
32Coalition for the Good of AllFelipe Calderón[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
02,013,1804.2512,024,5284.26Progressive MovementEnrique Peña Nieto[[File:PRI logo (Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
22,621,3174.8752,654,0854.89Por México al FrenteAndrés Manuel López Obrador[[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition
26,460,22011.3236,528,23811.33NoneClaudia Sheinbaum[[File:Morena_Party_(Mexico).svg23px]]Opposition

Notes

References

References

  1. "Nobis N° 01 Contenidos".
  2. "Movimiento Ciudadano: Declaración de Principios".
  3. "Movimiento Ciudadano: Declaración de Principios".
  4. "Movimiento Ciudadano".
  5. "Padrón de afiliados".
  6. Steytler, Nico. (2021-10-27). "Comparative Federalism and Covid-19: Combating the Pandemic". Routledge.
  7. Graham, Thomas. (2024-06-03). "Mexico elects Claudia Sheinbaum as its first female president in landslide victory". The Guardian.
  8. (25 June 2018). "Frequently Asked Questions". [[International Foundation for Electoral Systems]].
  9. Arredondo, Armando Ojeda. (2017-03-20). "Cartelera panorámica de propaganda política de elecciones federales 2015 en Ciudad Juárez, México, con fotografías analizadas desde el visual framing". RICSH Revista Iberoamericana de las Ciencias Sociales y Humanísticas.
  10. "Parties & Organisations - Progressive Alliance".
  11. (31 July 2011). "Convergencia se transforma en Movimiento Ciudadano".
  12. "Partido Convergencia".
  13. "Coalición "Salvemos a México": PT - Convergencia: Plataforma Electoral 2009".
  14. (2012-01-27). "Convergencia se convierte en Movimiento Ciudadano - El Universal - Nación".
  15. (2012-09-10). "AMLO: sin ruptura, dejo el Movimiento Ciudadano".
  16. "Movimiento Ciudadano anuncia Frente No Electoral".
  17. Arista, Lidia. (November 25, 2017). "El Frente Ciudadano no es contra Morena: Raúl Flores".
  18. (2017-09-05). "El PAN, el PRD y Movimiento Ciudadano constituirán un frente común para 2018".
  19. (July 2020). "Movimiento Naranja, el video que se ha convertido en un fenomeno viral".
  20. (18 December 2017). "Movimiento Naranja - Yuawi - Movimiento Ciudadano". [[YouTube]].
  21. "Movimiento Ciudadano no va en alianza con ningún partido político en las elecciones federales; propone construir un nuevo trato para el país: la Evolución Mexicana".
  22. "Samuel García destapa a Jorge Álvarez Maynez como candidato presidencial de Movimiento Ciudadano".
  23. "Plataforma Electoral 2021: Movimiento Ciudadano".
  24. "Movimiento Ciudadano: Plataforma Electoral y Programa de Gobierno".
  25. "Y a todo esto, ¿de quién es la canción Movimiento Naranja?".
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